http://finance.yahoo.com/family-home/article/106466/Where-You-Wont-Shop-in-2009
Expect closings and bankruptcies to rattle the likes of Lane Bryant, Gap, and Starbucks. It's the inevitable counterpunch to the days of retailers fighting hand over fist for market share during an era of loose credit and minuscule interest rates.
Retailers at risk in 2009, he thinks, include outerwear specialist Eddie Bauer and teen-apparel-seller Pacific Sunwear, along with Zales, the big jewelry chain. All three shuttered at least 8% of their U.S. stores last year, with many more closings expected. The same is largely true of Charming Shoppes, the owner of Lane Bryant, which closed 150 stores last year. With a mountain of debt and losses totaling over $260 million over the most recent 12-month reporting period, the company will close another 100 locations this year.
Another possible casualty: Sears Holdings, operator of Sears and Kmart stores. A key to hedge fund manager Eddie Lampert's 2005 merger of the two chains was in the underlying real estate. But with those values down 30% or so since then, slumping sales hit even worse.
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Gap is the advertisement I get on this page :wink2:
Its not surprising that there will be a fallout in retail chains especially if they are highly leveraged .
Supermarkets will probably do better.People have to eat :pointlol:
I will mss Starbucks the most .There is free wi-fi access close to my home.cnc66 and Fin Fan In Cali like this. -
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texanphinatic and FinSane like this.
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That may change if money gets tighter thoughFin Fan In Cali likes this. -
CrunchTime likes this.
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opfinistic likes this.
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Starbucks closing? Now where are millions of college students going to go to get over-caffeinated? :tongue2:
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I think. :lol:
:Dopfinistic and Regan21286 like this. -
anlgp likes this.
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i hope more people shop in the supermarkets. i make commission on certain products at publix(in fl) and the more you people buy, the better! make me rich!
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Starbucks isn't going anywhere. Store closings, reorg of their debt maybe, but not disappearing.
They could disappear for all I care though. As a semi-coffee geek I can't stand their coffee. They get the nickname Charbucks for a reason -
My girlfriend is a Starbucks store manager and they are actually doing very well but she manages one of the 10 busiest stores in Canada. This is more media related panic. Sure, they are closing stores but only the ones that are doing badly. That is a good way to do business. They are opening stores at the same time, at least in Canada. MY g/f has two new ones opening in her district in the next 3 months and they still can't find enough people to employ.
That said, she BETTER not get laid off seeing as I did last week. -
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Coral Reefer and HardKoreXXX like this.
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Until the Govt. steps in and admits the loophole in the Free Market, our economy will continue to sputter.Coral Reefer and opfinistic like this. -
Coral Reefer and HardKoreXXX like this.
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opfinistic likes this.
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Just as you guys said. THey will rerorganize. They simply oversaturated the concept into "B" and "C" secondary locations. Which were all pretty much doing well at the time but with the downturn they need to pull back.
Their "A" or prime locations are still doing just fine.
It's not just about coffee. They've created an entire culture with their stores that is now woven into the work ethic of students and professionals around the entire country. People are willing to pay more for the experience still and the ability to come into a hip study/reading area complete with internet access and all kinds of caffeine bevs. just a step away.
They are too entrenched into society at this point to dissapear. -
All the people that carry the Free Market flag in debates irritate the crap out of me. The reason is simple. You cannot compete in a free market where other countries are simply not willing to play by the same rules. That is why the Free market theory is totally flawed. It is killing our economy. It's simply a tool to maximize stockholder profits in the short term at the expense of those companies and our economy in the long run.